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Linda Forsythe (C-VINE)

Linda Forsythe (C-VINE)

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Founder of C-VINE = Community Voices ~ Investigations ~ News ~ Education

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Repost from General Flynn ️
01:27
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Ottoman Empire 2 dot 0. Time to take a stand on the redoubts for our Republic. President Trump, I pray someone is showing you this type of information. These are not one-offs…they are telling us their plans. We better be listening.
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Good Morning Family 🌄 The following great post was written by @Mashburn4NC. After reading it, does your heart tell you that President Trump will follow in George Washington's footsteps? After securing a victory for our country, will he hand the reigns back over to the people to rule themselves? ~~~ "In 1783, King George III asked an American painter what George Washington would do now that he had virtually won the war. The painter replied that the General intended to return to his farm in Virginia. The King was stunned. He reportedly said, "If he does that, he will be the greatest man in the world." Throughout history, victorious generals almost always seized the throne. From Caesar to Cromwell, military success usually meant political dictatorship. The concept of voluntarily walking away from absolute power was practically unheard of. But George Washington wasn't like other men. By December 4, 1783, the British surrender at Yorktown was past, and peace was finally assured. Washington commanded a powerful, seasoned army that adored him. Conversely, many of his officers were unpaid and angry at the inefficient Congress. They had the guns, the manpower, and the loyalty to install a new monarch. He could have been King George I of America. Instead, on this day in history, Washington walked into the Long Room at Fraunces Tavern in lower Manhattan. The room was filled with his most loyal officers—men like Henry Knox and Baron von Steuben—who had frozen with him at Valley Forge and bled with him for eight long years. The atmosphere wasn't celebratory. It was heavy with inevitable separation. Washington, usually stoic and commercially reserved, poured a glass of wine and looked at his brothers-in-arms with visible emotion. "With a heart full of love and gratitude, I now take leave of you," he said, his voice shaking. "I most devoutly wish that your latter days may be as prosperous and happy as your former ones have been glorious and honorable." He didn't order them. He didn't demand their allegiance. He hugged them. One by one, the hardened soldiers wept openly. Washington embraced each man in silence. There was no pomp, no ceremony, and no speeches about future conquests. It was just a quiet goodbye between warriors who had done the impossible. Immediately after leaving the tavern, Washington didn't march on Congress to demand payment or power. He rode to Annapolis, Maryland, resigned his commission, and went home to Mount Vernon to plant crops. He did the impossible. He refused the crown. He trusted the people. By stepping down, he ensured that the United States would be a republic ruled by laws, not a kingdom ruled by force. He proved that the military serves the people, not the other way around. It was the final, and perhaps greatest, victory of the Revolution. The world watched in awe as the American Cincinnatus returned his sword to its sheath, proving that character is the strongest constitution of all." Sources: Mount Vernon Ladies' Association / Library of Congress https://twitter.com/Mashburn4NC/status/1996929583052984662?t=3P11_uvrk0l8WJ2kIT4ZYQ&s=19
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Good Morning Family 🌄 The following great post was written by @Mashburn4NC. After reading it, does your heart tell you that President Trump will follow in George Washington's footsteps? After securing a victory for our country, will he hand the reigns back over to the people to rule themselves? ~~~ "In 1783, King George III asked an American painter what George Washington would do now that he had virtually won the war. The painter replied that the General intended to return to his farm in Virginia. The King was stunned. He reportedly said, "If he does that, he will be the greatest man in the world." Throughout history, victorious generals almost always seized the throne. From Caesar to Cromwell, military success usually meant political dictatorship. The concept of voluntarily walking away from absolute power was practically unheard of. But George Washington wasn't like other men. By December 4, 1783, the British surrender at Yorktown was past, and peace was finally assured. Washington commanded a powerful, seasoned army that adored him. Conversely, many of his officers were unpaid and angry at the inefficient Congress. They had the guns, the manpower, and the loyalty to install a new monarch. He could have been King George I of America. Instead, on this day in history, Washington walked into the Long Room at Fraunces Tavern in lower Manhattan. The room was filled with his most loyal officers—men like Henry Knox and Baron von Steuben—who had frozen with him at Valley Forge and bled with him for eight long years. The atmosphere wasn't celebratory. It was heavy with inevitable separation. Washington, usually stoic and commercially reserved, poured a glass of wine and looked at his brothers-in-arms with visible emotion. "With a heart full of love and gratitude, I now take leave of you," he said, his voice shaking. "I most devoutly wish that your latter days may be as prosperous and happy as your former ones have been glorious and honorable." He didn't order them. He didn't demand their allegiance. He hugged them. One by one, the hardened soldiers wept openly. Washington embraced each man in silence. There was no pomp, no ceremony, and no speeches about future conquests. It was just a quiet goodbye between warriors who had done the impossible. Immediately after leaving the tavern, Washington didn't march on Congress to demand payment or power. He rode to Annapolis, Maryland, resigned his commission, and went home to Mount Vernon to plant crops. He did the impossible. He refused the crown. He trusted the people. By stepping down, he ensured that the United States would be a republic ruled by laws, not a kingdom ruled by force. He proved that the military serves the people, not the other way around. It was the final, and perhaps greatest, victory of the Revolution. The world watched in awe as the American Cincinnatus returned his sword to its sheath, proving that character is the strongest constitution of all." Sources: Mount Vernon Ladies' Association / Library of Congress https://twitter.com/Mashburn4NC/status/1996929583052984662?t=3P11_uvrk0l8WJ2kIT4ZYQ&s=19
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Repost from The Justice League
01:44
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NOW — Candace Owens insinuates that her husband George Farmer is the decision-maker on whether she will do an in-person show with TPUSA. Owens says she will beg George Farmer if TPUSA says she is allowed to bring her team and show "timelines."
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Repost from MJTruth
00:24
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Marjorie Taylor Greene says President Donald Trump was “extremely angry with her” for signing the discharge petition to release the Epstein files. "He said that it was going to hurt people," A. Kayfabe B. Traitor C. Not sure, gimme popcorn 🍿 https://rumble.com/v72nom0-mtg-trumps-as-a-grey-i-wanted-to-release-epstein-files.html 📱 ReTWEET 📱 ReTRUTH
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This showed true leadership and humility. Could it happen today? https://twitter.com/TRHLofficial/status/1996608321541861707?t=7C7xrqrqLsvNLcfOX1elTA&s=19
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00:33
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01:14
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Good Morning Family ♥️
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01:14
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Good Morning Family ♥️
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02:19
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Now I want a Japanese toilet. Hilarious! 🤣😂😅
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02:19
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Now I want a Japanese toilet. Hilarious! 🤣😂😅
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I felt this post written by @biblicalman on X was worth repeating. What do you think? "I read this story a hundred times and missed the point. Not the resurrection. What happened before that. A man climbed a hill with three crosses. The crowds were gone. The soldiers drunk. The women weeping. And one wealthy man with clean hands decided to get them dirty. He walked to Pilate — the man who just murdered his Lord — and asked for the body. Then he climbed the ladder. Grabbed the first nail. Pulled. Feel the weight of that moment. God's body in your arms. Blood not dry yet. Staining expensive robes. Hands. Under fingernails. The smell of iron in the air. Here's what wrecked me: Passover was three hours away. The holiest day of the Jewish year. And touching a dead body meant one thing: Unclean for seven days. No temple. No worship. No Passover. He knew this. He'd spent his entire life following these laws. But Jesus was still hanging on that cross. So he climbed anyway. Joseph of Arimathea didn't do this expecting resurrection. He did it expecting nothing. Jesus was dead. Gone. Finished. This wasn't faith in a miracle. This was love for a corpse. He gave up his purity. His Passover. His reputation. His seat on the Sanhedrin. His safety. For a dead man who couldn't thank him. Modern Christianity wants clean obedience. Safe obedience. Obedience that doesn't cost you Passover. But Joseph shows us something else: True discipleship gets your hands dirty. Three days later, that tomb was empty. Joseph gave his grave to Jesus. Jesus gave it back. The twist Joseph never saw coming. Your messy obedience? God's using it too. Even when you can't see it. So here's the question: What are you avoiding because it's too messy? What grave are you unwilling to give? Joseph held death in his arms and missed the holiest day of his life. And earned his name in all four Gospels. Religion says stay clean. Discipleship says climb the ladder. What are you choosing?" https://twitter.com/Biblicalman/status/1996380894844600721?t=FaEWDtIH-TOuIL_lS0KtJA&s=19
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I felt this post written by @biblicalman on X was worth repeating. What do you think? "I read this story a hundred times and missed the point. Not the resurrection. What happened before that. A man climbed a hill with three crosses. The crowds were gone. The soldiers drunk. The women weeping. And one wealthy man with clean hands decided to get them dirty. He walked to Pilate — the man who just murdered his Lord — and asked for the body. Then he climbed the ladder. Grabbed the first nail. Pulled. Feel the weight of that moment. God's body in your arms. Blood not dry yet. Staining expensive robes. Hands. Under fingernails. The smell of iron in the air. Here's what wrecked me: Passover was three hours away. The holiest day of the Jewish year. And touching a dead body meant one thing: Unclean for seven days. No temple. No worship. No Passover. He knew this. He'd spent his entire life following these laws. But Jesus was still hanging on that cross. So he climbed anyway. Joseph of Arimathea didn't do this expecting resurrection. He did it expecting nothing. Jesus was dead. Gone. Finished. This wasn't faith in a miracle. This was love for a corpse. He gave up his purity. His Passover. His reputation. His seat on the Sanhedrin. His safety. For a dead man who couldn't thank him. Modern Christianity wants clean obedience. Safe obedience. Obedience that doesn't cost you Passover. But Joseph shows us something else: True discipleship gets your hands dirty. Three days later, that tomb was empty. Joseph gave his grave to Jesus. Jesus gave it back. The twist Joseph never saw coming. Your messy obedience? God's using it too. Even when you can't see it. So here's the question: What are you avoiding because it's too messy? What grave are you unwilling to give? Joseph held death in his arms and missed the holiest day of his life. And earned his name in all four Gospels. Religion says stay clean. Discipleship says climb the ladder. What are you choosing?" https://twitter.com/Biblicalman/status/1996380894844600721?t=FaEWDtIH-TOuIL_lS0KtJA&s=19
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00:26
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LMFAO! Tim Walz FUMES that people are calling him a “RETARD” in public now that President Trump did it “People driving by my house and using the R word!!” 😭😭 “This creates danger!” 🇺🇸Join👉 @SGTnewsNetwork 📎 X  (Twitter)▪️Truth Social
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Repost from MJTruth
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Candace Owens responds: It’s weird TPUSA didn’t call or email her— she learned about it only on X and TPUSA scheduled it during her show. She says she will cancel her show and do it virtually anytime. Why does TPUSA want her there in person? Why can’t they do it virtually?
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00:15
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Good Morning Family 💝 Carpe Diem!
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